European Central Bank’s Lagarde says China’s Covid reopening will push inflation higher

Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank spoke at a CNBC panel at the World Economic Forum

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DAVOS, Switzerland — China’s decision to reopen its economy will increase inflation in Europe as they both compete for more energy, the president of the European Central Bank said Friday.

There has been extensive debate this week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, about whether Beijing’s decision to end its zero-Covid policy will bring more or less inflation.

On the one hand, some argue that because supply chains are being restored then the reopening might ease some of the inflationary pressures that Europe has faced in recent months.

On the other hand, others note that China will be consuming more energy and this will add to ongoing inflationary pressures.

President Christine Lagarde, chief of the euro zone’s central bank, is among the latter group.

ECB's Lagarde: China reopening will cause increased inflationary pressure

China’s reopening is “something that will be a positive for China mostly, something that will be a positive for the rest of the world, but we will have inflationary pressure on many of us, simply because the level of energy that was consumed by China last year was certainly less than what they will consume this year, the amount of LNG [liquefied natural gas] that [they] will be buying from the rest of the world will be higher than what we have seen and there is not so much spare capacity in terms of oil and gas,” Lagarde said during a Davos panel Friday led by CNBC’s Geoff Cutmore.

“So there will be constraints, there will be more inflationary pressure coming out of that added demand,” she added.

The International Energy Agency has warned that European companies might face higher costs when looking to purchase natural gas this year as there will be more competition for the commodity.

Inflation has been one of the biggest challenges for European citizens for the last year, mostly driven by higher energy bills.

The ECB raised rates four times throughout 2022, bringing its deposit rate to 2%. The central bank in December said it would be increasing rates further in 2023 to address sky-high inflation.

Recent data has shown a slowdown in headline inflation, even if it remains well above the ECB’s 2% target.

December inflation came in at 9.2% in the euro zone, according to preliminary numbers. This was the second consecutive monthly drop in price rises across the euro zone.

 

 

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